‘When will you speak?’ The Congress listed 13 trump claims on the Indo-Pak ceasefire; Question PM Modi’s foreign policy | Bharat News

The Congress has once again questioned Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s silence over the consecutive claims of US President Donald Trump that he has played an important role in stopping the war between India and Pakistan.Senior Congress leader Jeram Ramesh posted on X on Saturday that in 34 days between May 10 to June 13, 2025, Trump publicly claimed 13 times in three different countries that he used trade deals to pressurize India and Pakistan in ceasefire. Ramesh wrote, “@Narendramodi When will you speak?”Ramesh also shared a list of Trump’s comments, in which Trump reiterated his claim that he “stopped the war between India and Pakistan” as a profit using trade. He said that Trump has continued these claims “for nth time”, while Prime Minister Modi is silent. The Pahgam was rapidly increased between India and Pakistan on 22 April after the terrorist attack. India on May 7 made accurate attacks on terrorist camps in Pakistan and Pakistan -occupied Kashmir. Pakistan retaliated by trying to attack Indian military establishments on 8 May, 9 and 10. While Trump claims that the US played a decisive role in ending the struggle, India continuously maintained that the ceasefire was obtained through direct dialogue between the two terrorists, without any foreign arbitration. Earlier this week, the Congress also criticized the foreign policy of the Modi government, calling it a failure. Ramesh revealed three recent developments as major diplomatic failures: US Army General Michael Kurila called Pakistan a “unprecedented partner”, Washington was reported to be a “unprecedented partner”, Pakistan’s Chief General Asim Munir’s US Army Day celebrations, and recently comments from the trump administration’s spokeson brought the Trump between India and Pakistan. Ramesh urged Prime Minister Modi to rise above “stubbornness” and call an all-party meeting and a special parliament session to discuss India’s growing diplomatic challenges.